Determining What's Real™ So That You Don't Have To

Picnics in Space by Universe

In 1976, NASA Administrator James Fletcher noted that “The question, ‘What is feasible?’ can be finally answered only by future historians.” He was talking about the elaborate plans for space habitats the agency had spent a summer noodling over, but the same remark could have been made to the incredulous before the first moon landing, for example — or before the birth of transoceanic voyages in the 14th and 15th Centuries.

So begins of one of my favorite pieces of utopist NASA detritus, a document called Space Settlements: A Design Study, made over the course of a 10-week workshop at the Ames research center in 1976. Among those involved: Gerard K. O’Neill, physicist and author of High Frontier, a very groovy (and seminal) book about space colonization. The study, under O’Neill’s leadership, proposes all kinds of wild and wooly space environments, from Bernal spheres to giant spinning cylinders, with acres of plants and false clouds hanging halfway in the sky, massive windows and mirrors to catch the sun, green capsules in the black depths of space.

What’s particularly interesting about the 1976 study is not the fantastically romantic schematic drawings (although those are a plus), but the rare attention the team paid to what they called “psychological and cultural considerations.” The engineering constraints of a functional space colony are overwhelming, but technically achievable — while delicate psychological imbalances can destroy an extra-terrestrial community from the inside out. Look at what happened with the Biosphere 2, for example. And that was on Earth!

According to the NASA study, one of the fundamental problems posed to survival in an outer-space colony environment is the general feeling of un-reality of the whole operation. As a species, we are far from being flexible enough to normalize the feeling of floating in space; a space colony is the kind of environment which could trigger our brains to feel that everything is a dream and nothing outside of our own mind is real. Psychologists call this dissociative mental state “solipsism syndrome,” and it occurs in people who live in strenuous psychological environments, like the Arctic winter. Waking up every morning to dazzling vistas of interstellar space might produce the same effect, with day-to-day life becoming an unending dream with no tether to waking reality. Quoth the study: “this state of mind can be easily produced in an environment where everything is artificial, where everything is like a theater stage, where every wish can be fulfilled by a push-button, and where there is nothing beyond the theater stage and beyond an individual’s control.”

A fantastic problem.

Is it possible to trick our brains into getting over it?

The NASA study suggests a variety of options, from factoring controlled unpredictability into everyday life to ensuring that everyone feels able to contribute to something which grows (namely children and vegetables). Most importantly, however, the illusion that life is taking place inside of a kind of self-contained “theater stage” must be shattered: “it is important to have ‘something beyond the horizon’ which gives the feeling that the world is larger than what is seen.” In fact, again and again, the study emphasizes the need for a long line of sight, for a sense of massive space and openness, to counter the claustrophobia and bring the erratic (and hence reassuring) processes of nature into clear view.

These three factors — unpredictability, growth, and mystery — could define the psychological needs of the human Id in a nutshell, right?

Reality™ Feed

Both the Washington Post and Atlantic Media, owner of Quartz, are framing a gesture of peace between North and South Korea as propaganda, pushing us further toward nuclear war. https://www.washingtonpost.com/amphtml/politics/pences-olympic-mission--rebuff-north-koreas-propaganda/2018/02/09/6140f7b4-0d9c-11e8-baf5-e629fc1cd21e_story.html?utm_term=.a5a2276e9086&__twitter_impression=true ... See more

Amid the pomp of the opening ceremonies, Pyongyang can pretend that everything is OK back home.

The fact that North and South Korea are demonstrating the desire for peace at the Olympics should be an indicator that the U.S. is the obstacle to successful negotiations. The concept of North Korea as a threat is State propaganda propagated by the mainstream media to stoke unnecessary war to profit the weapons manufacturers. North Korea has repeatedly stated that its nuclear weapons program is defensive and that it will end the program if the U.S. and South Korea end their military posturing on North Korea’s border. https://www.democracynow.org/2018/2/9/olympics_begin_with_unified_korean_team ... See more

In Pyeongchang, South Korea, the 2018 Winter Olympics have opened, with North and South Korean athletes marching together at the open ceremonies. The games are seen as a pivotal moment for relations between the two countries, who have been officially at war since 1950. In an effort to de-escalate te... ... See more

Officers don’t shoot, they are merely “involved” in shootings; victims are not victims, but “suspects” “fleeing”; human beings become premortem cadavers as bullets “enter the torso” rather than the chest of a person; guns and bullets act on their own as they “discharge” or “enter the right femur,” rather than being fired by autonomous individuals with agency and purpose. Headlines become 14-word, jargon-heavy tangles where a simple five-word description would suffice. ... See more